![]() |
1.800.344.6118 { contact us } |
||||||||||||||||||
Northern Chile |
|||||||||||||||||||
| Home · Testimonials · In the News · Tour Index · About Us · Lodging · Discounts · Journals · My Trip Planner | |||||||||||||||||||
South America Amazon Tours Argentina Tours Bolivia Tours Chile Tours Ecuador Tours Galapagos Tours Patagonia Tours Peru Tours Central America Belize Tours Costa Rica Tours Guatemala Tours Panama Tours Antarctica Antarctica Tours Worldwide Expedition CruisesQuestions about a tour? Contact us with your questions. Technical Problem? Contact the webmaster for assistance. Are you a Travel Agent? Click here to Contact us.
Adventure Life
800-344-6118 (Toll-free) 406-541-2677 (International) 406-541-2676 (Fax) E-mail us 1655 S 3rd St. W, Ste 1 Missoula MT, 59801 USA |
HOME » Articles » Northern Chile Northern Chile
The vast and colorful Atacama Desert is said to be the driest desert in the world. In some parts of this desert, no precipitation has ever been recorded. The Altiplano, on the other hand, receives tropical rains in January and February. Altitude, rather than aridity, is the limiting factor governing life on this airy plateau: only the hardiest and most highly specialized flora and fauna can survive the vagaries of life above 12,000 ft. Speckled with lakes, marshes, salt flats, and geysers, crowned by 20,000 foot volcanoes, the Altiplano is Chile's link with the great civilizations of the Central Andes. Today, a traditional society of Aymara Indians wanders the Altiplano with their domesticated llamas and alpacas, congregating periodically for festivals in eerily whitewashed 'ceremonial villages'. A system of spectacular national parks -- including Lauca National Park, a UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve -- protects vast expanses of this singular landscape. Some of the rain that falls in the Altiplano drains west, into the Atacama Desert. Where it emerges, this water transforms the landscape, creating a trail of vegetation and cultivation, human habitation and wildlife habitat, salt flats and eventually, salt mountains.
Near the southernmost limit of the region, the towns of Copiapó and La Serena provide access to narrow east-west agricultural valleys best known as producers of Chile's beloved pisco (grape brandy) and site of the southern hemisphere's clearest skies, which attract professional and amateur astronomers from across the globe. Thanks to the Tourism Promotion Corporation of Chile : 202-530-4109
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||